Ten years on from the Jasmine revolution, the masses are moving again

The ravages of Covid have added to the longstanding issues of poverty, hunger, unemployment and corruption which brought down Ben Ali a decade ago.

Lalkar writers

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In January, protesters in Tunis chanted: “No more fear, the streets belong to the people” and “the people want the fall of the regime” – slogans popularised during the Jasmine revolution ten years ago. Anger continues to boil over amongst the Tunisian masses at the continued high levels of unemployment and corruption, and at the government’s disastrous handling of the Covid pandemic.

Lalkar writers

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Tunisia, the north African country from which the so-called ‘Arab spring’ first erupted, has been plunged back into political and economic chaos with the sacking in July of prime minister Hichem Mechichi by President Kais Saied.

Parliament has been suspended, MPs have been stripped of immunity and there have been multiple arrests of political opponents on corruption charges. Saied imposed a month’s curfew, since extended indefinitely, and banned meetings in public of more than three people.

The immediate trigger for the current crisis was the government’s shambolic handling of the Covid pandemic. There have been over 100,000 cases of infections and nearly 400,000 deaths in the country, whilst only 11 percent have been vaccinated. The belated launch of 29 vaccination sites descended into chaos as frustrated crowds stampeded.

The prime minister blamed the health minister for the botched roll-out and sacked him, and then the president in turn blamed the prime minister. Days later, the prime minister was himself sacked and Parliament shut down. The army is now in charge of dealing with Covid.

In the aftermath of the 2011 ousting of former dictator Ben Ali, there followed a period of major upheavals as different factions vied for power. There was a rash of protests and assassinations, sparked in part by tensions between the governing islamist Ennahda party and the mostly secular protesters.

In 2014, a new constitution was approved by referendum which established a power-sharing agreement resting on a ruling troika comprising president, prime minister and Parliament. It is the collapse of that troika, with the president sacking the prime minister and suspending Parliament, that has upset the applecart.

The pandemic has hit Tunisia hard, and it comes on the heels of earlier blows, notably the devastating terrorist attacks on tourist locations in 2015 and 2016. The position of the governing Ennadha party is ambiguous. Ennadha, led by the parliamentary speaker Rached Ghannouchi, began life as an islamist movement, but has latterly rebranded itself as a ‘muslim democracy’.

In government, Ennadha belatedly took measures to curb the rise of jihadi terrorism, but was too late to prevent 1,500 Tunisians going to Libya and 3,000 going to Iraq and Syria to train with Islamic State. In 2015 and 2016 there were three big terrorist attacks in Tunisia: against the Bardo museum, at a beach resort in Sousse, and in the city of Ben Gardane on the border with Libya.

The once-booming tourist industry, still reeling from the terrorist attacks and now enduring a freeze on travel imposed by the pandemic, itself speaks volumes about how Tunisia’s economy is out of kilter. The hugely disproportionate role played by tourism in the economy, whilst other sectors are left to wither on the vine, leads to a grotesque situation where water supplies are diverted from parched fields in order to fill hotel pools and water golf courses.

Underlying all of Tunisia’s serial crises are the perennial issues of poverty, unemployment, debt, corruption and an economy skewed to serve imperialism and its comprador leeches – that is to say, all the problems that led to the downfall of Ben Ali and which are no nearer resolution ten years later.

The economy shrank by 8 percent last year, while unemployment rose to 17 percent, and the supposed ‘cure’ for this state of affairs is to extend borrowing from the IMF, thereby getting deeper into a debt trap. A current bone of contention is the possibility of a further IMF loan of $4bn, variously seen as a lifeline or a poisoned chalice.

Whilst the country is still on the rack of the pandemic, the IMF is already looking beyond the health emergency to sing the virtues of “supporting private sector-led growth”, reducing energy subsidies “in a socially conscious way” and containing “the civil service wage bill”, whilst confessing that “progress on structural reforms necessary to make a dent in high unemployment and poverty has remained elusive”.

In the ten years that have elapsed since the desperate young Mohamed Bouazizi set fire to himself, that ‘dent in high unemployment and poverty’ has grown ever more ‘elusive’.

Bouazizi killed himself because the local council banned him from selling his fruit and vegetables, his sole source of income, and the police confiscated his merchandise. With starvation staring him in the face, he took his own life in an act of utter desperation. As news of this young man’s tragic death spread, it ignited the anger of the masses, sparking the huge demonstrations that finally forced Ben Ali out.

Now it is the pandemic that has brought matters to a head. It remains to be seen how the Tunisian masses respond this time around.